Well, if you are unethical or try to be something you aren't, then I guess looking for brownie points and measuring ethical conduct as a performance sport might be the way to go.On a general level though, measuring ethics and ethical behavior on some kind of scale looks very difficult if not impossible. Isn't that right? — Alkis Piskas
As a Finn and as an European I just point out to my Mexican (Latin) wife that my skin is darker than hers. That's how stupid the whole race thing is.:up: We're all African apes. If someone discriminates personally prejudicially by shoe size, place of birth, freckle count, melanin pigmentation, or some such, then they're a racist (and that's meant as an insult). — jorndoe
Should we expect impeachment of ≈ every president onwards? Future statistics going by least impeachments? Hopefully not. — jorndoe
I don't think they are slaves, and haven't been for a long time. Sometimes you are just in a country where politics doesn't work so well as in other countries and you don't have democracy, rights of the individual and a justice state. Mexicans are nice people, but their government is terrible. I would say the same thing about Russia. We should remember that our countries could also lose our democracy if everything would go to hell in a handbasket. And then we are just awed how insane our society has become and how crazy our fellow citizens are.I think that as far as Slavic people go, Ukrainians are better than Russians. The latter have always been slaves. — Olivier5
Why would any hatred of a large people or a country be morally right?Why should the Western hatred of Russians (and Slavic people in general) be considered morally right? — baker
As an old saying goes, everything is fine "up to a point". Perhaps it's that there are many videos.Why did she do that?
If partying and drinking are so great and make her so capable of ruling her people, then why apologize for partying and drinking?? — baker
Because she had done that already. Far before the last round of partying, when the first criticisms of her partying emerged. Then she had that defiant response.Why didn't she say something like, "Yes, I'm a Prime Minister. Yes, I party. Yay!" ? And perhaps throw a "Deal with it!" in the mix. — baker

I think she is just has learnt that the old rules apply and are useful.If she wants to be a politician of a new era, then she should behave like one consistently and play by the new rules, not the old ones. — baker

Except that usually arms are sold. Not given. That's the real difference here.That's not "standing" with someone, it's supplying arms. — boethius
Poor, poor Russians. Threatened by Nazi's.Because there's an important port in Sevastopol which an anti-Russian government supported by literal Nazi's would threaten, and Crimea was Russian not long ago and is filled with ethnic Russians. — boethius
Except giving military and financial aid to Ukraine. Which actually rarely happens.Again, no one is actually "standing" with Ukraine, except a few foreign fighters. — boethius
We see statements like this, but never see any evidence. — boethius
There's a huge difference on what kind of subsidy one wants for a negative outcome than with the tax one would pay for there be no negative outcome.people respond better to subsidies than taxes, no surprise there but there's still a majority for making sacrifices also in the form of taxes. — Benkei

Wouldn't the question about be poor people, not the rich people that can afford brand new electric cars?So people are prepared to do this, provided rich people are under the same ban. — Benkei
:smile:Why not? Do people just flee to the Eurasian steppes and live with camels to escape the draft?
Bu
Or do they dress like Cossacks and get so drunk their hearts stop beating?
I'm very familiar with Russian life, as you can tell. — Tate
Russia on Tuesday temporarily exempted young IT workers from military service after an exodus of programmers following Moscow's military operation in Ukraine.
in Russia, military service is mandatory for men aged 18 to 27. But according to a recent European Parliamentary Research Service report, each year, half of all would-be conscripts—75,000 out of an annual intake of around 150,000 young men—are thought to be dodging the draft.
By logic, do you mean first order logic?Not sure. The logics here are an attempt to make these issues clear. — Banno
There is a very interesting longue durée in the way Russia works it's imperialistic goals. The methods and tactics are basically same. From Putin's speeches the historical viewpoint is evident, something that rarely Western politicians use, but is very common for example in the Middle East.The disastrous Winter War that preceded this didn't discourage the Soviets - and the gamble payed off. They installed puppet governments, which promptly held "elections," followed by a vote to become new Soviet Socialist Republics (with 90+% voting in favor).
So yeah, they've learned all the wrong lessons from history, if they learned at all. — SophistiCat
Aug 25 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Thursday to increase the size of Russia's armed forces from 1.9 million to 2.04 million as the war in Ukraine enters its seventh month.
Moscow has not revealed any losses in the conflict since its first weeks, but Western officials and the Kyiv government say they number in the thousands.
The increase includes a 137,000 boost in the number of combat personnel to 1.15 million. It comes into effect on Jan 1, according to the decree published on the government's legislative portal.
In Kekkonen's and Koivisto's time yes, but in the 1990's the tabloid press started to be "normal" even in Finland by European standards. For the last thirty years they would go for the jugular when these kind of pictures / videos come out. And now, in our time, the "old media" just has to respond what already has happened as is already discussed in the social media.My woman friends claim it wouldn't even be an issue if it was a male politician. — boethius
Many Finnish men have a "personal problem" with alcohol.There's a bunch of examples of male politicians getting blackout drunk on official visits and so on, but my counter-point is they weren't Prime Minister, but things like cultural minister (representing Finnish drinking culture). — boethius
I'm not sure just how well that "boys will be boys" thing will go in the post me-too environment. You have to be a Donald Trump: have firm backing from your supporters that think everything you do is great as you irritate the elites and everything bad thrown at you is just fake news.However, a male getting drunk and frisky at a party I don't think would be automatically interpreted as cheating. Easily have a "boys will be boys" narrative around it, but I do agree the leaving your wife alone with the child to go party would be viewed as classic douche archetype ... but that's not necessarily so damaging politically. — boethius
I remember when they studied the effects of WW2 on children in Finland, they found that the most traumatic experiences were with those children that were evacuated to Sweden and were separated from their families and parents. No civilians were left to the hands of Russians as the civilian population was evacuated from front. At least now it has been mothers with their children that have been evacuated from Ukraine.Over half of Ukraine's children are now refugees or fleeing (some more or less kidnapped), with no light at the end of the Ukrainian tunnel.
As seen before, a generation could be lost, while Putin's machinations bomb away, allegedly to deNazify and/or out of fear of NATO.
The right thing to do in the immediate term would be for Putin to turn the volume down, simple as that.
So far, UNICEF et al arranged for schooling/education for some 600,000 children having fled Ukraine. — jorndoe


I think you are correct.About time you showed up :wink: . Her image has been severely undermined and so, I think she's effectively finished. And she probably knows that. Hence the tears. It's not a moral issue, and nothing she did is inconsistent with being a top class PM. It's just the image. The "Prime Minister" is that thing in our head we consider Prime-Ministerish and for most people that has certain boundaries. We don't want the human getting in the way. We'd rather brush that under the carpet. Her sin was letting her human out there in full HD vid, so we can't. Ergo, she's toast imo, though she'll probably limp on for a while. — Baden
Well, Sanna basicallty jumped to this immediately. I think only some opposition politician tweeted that she should take one. And that's it. The media wasn't asking for it. And she took a pee test, which umm...shows if you have had drugs during the couple of days.But actually it's pretty crazy that a highly succesful woman, who also happens to dance well, is forced for political reasons to take a drugtest. — Benkei


I think you and me will have to wait about 30 years before we have a reasonable view of what likely happened. It's true that only 50-100 years history usually has come to an overall conclusion and the historians are arguing about the minor details, but likely in 30 years we can see how it was.We don't really know what the motives are, there is widespread disagreement, and several narratives have come and gone about it in the Western press.
I'm completely open to speculation of essentially any plausible motive. — boethius
So your " completely open to speculation of essentially any plausible motive", yet you have decided that NATO expansion "is clearly a main driver of the hostilities and tensions". Well perhaps "a main driver" is better than "the main driver".It is clearly a main driver of the hostilities and tensions. — boethius
By annexing territories of other sovereign countries. Right. :roll:The only prima facie interpretation of the context available is that Russia is reacting to clearly hostile moves. — boethius

Again the "Putin attacked Ukraine because of NATO-membership" argument?All just "propaganda" a literal biographer of Putin pointing out we don't know Putin's objectives? — boethius
(TASS, February 16th 2022) BERLIN, February 16. /TASS/. Ukraine’s NATO membership is not on the alliance’s agenda at the moment, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz told German reporters after talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"There is a fact, and the fact is: all parties know that Ukraine’s NATO membership is not on the agenda," the German leader said at a news conference, broadcast by WELT.
He went on to say that in this situation "everyone should step back a bit," and spoke against "a military standoff about an issue which is not even on the agenda."
Scholz made similar statements during a joint news conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier in the day.
(NEXTA) German @Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz said that before the war in Ukraine began, he had promised Putin that Ukraine would not become a NATO member in the coming decades, Die Welt reports.
I'm not so sure about that. We do know something about how Russia works. Don't think it's all speculation. Starting with the US knowing that Russia would invade, there are things that are known. What Putin thinks inside his head we naturally have no idea.Again, wild speculations by Western media. — boethius
But they have not. And that's the important issue here.Obviously they would make it an "official war" if they wanted to, and they've talked about doing so. — boethius
With the information we have, we can at least quite confidently say that Russian morale isn't high and Ukrainian moral isn't on the verge of collapse.Again, we don't really have any statistically relevant data on Russian troops morale ... and low-morale in armies is pretty common and often goes up and down, total collapse being a pretty big outlier.
Moreover, is Ukrainian morale any better? — boethius
I had no idea that I was talking to a women.You're forgetting you're talking to a woman. — baker
I've seen studies that the diet worsened from the Early Middle Ages to the age of industrialization, but it might be too drastic to think our food now is less healthier. The 19th Century brought huge improvement to agriculture and also an emphasis on food safety requirements. Now we have the ability to eat extremely healthy food, but what actually the food we eat is another thing. The really irritating issue is that the healthy diet is far more costly than the cheapest food, which makes for a bad diet.The average peasant in the Dark Ages ate healthier food than most people do today. - Certainly no pesticides and no GMOs. In the old times, food was much healthier, much more satiating because it had real taste. — baker
I think it's far more about social assumptions than metaphysical ones.Sure. But what are the metaphysical assumptions behind them? — baker
I think this might be worth mentioning in your video, that you are using the broader meaning. It helps to avoid unnecessary criticism.This is indeed the modern meaning of "science", i.e. 17th century and onwards. But the word was used before in a broader sense. E.g. Aristotle used it as any topic that pertains to truth. — A Christian Philosophy
Well, don't forget the Trumps then:It’s just the death throes of another establishment political dynasty. The Cheneys, the Clintons, the Bushs—all are heading towards the trash-bin of history. — NOS4A2
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I had that response from reading the OP, which was quite on with the lines how typically these debates go.Maybe if you'd read the thread properly, you'd see the philosophical element here. The intersection between biology/psychology/society and the primacy of identity over behaviour, preference etc. But if you're not interested, that's OK too. — Baden
US demographics is far better, thanks to immigration.The replacement rate is low here as well. — Xtrix
And you think in those profit and non-profit organizations the managers didn't listen one iota at their workforce about anything? Nope, zero. They had their information from God (or something) and preached it to the organization without wanting to hear any feedback?Yes. Profit and non-profit. Completely beside the point, but there's an answer. — Xtrix
Might be.It depends on the specific context. In some ways, we are very similar to animals, yes, but it's a minor side issue here anyway. — Baden
Why bash animals? I've always thought that we are just smart animals, but otherwise there's not much different other than our extreme hubris about ourselves.Animals are irrelevant because they are always stuck at Level 1, being neither people nor social in the sense we are. — Baden
I've always what especially with being a sport teams fans has anything to do with "undying commitment to your land". The collective experience of singing stupid songs and getting drunk and breaking stuff I can imagine.Something makes you a fan. Your love of the team, your undying commitment to your land, the excitement of singing stupid songs, getting drunk with hooligans, whatever, but if it's just an undefined identity, then it's meaningless — Hanover
Scientific method = a method of procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses.
When you start a large conventional war and don't call it even war, you have this. Putin had the balls to put the Russian Armed Forces to make an all out attack on Ukraine, but he hadn't the balls to put the Russian society into war mode. You reap what you sow.Commanders are in a pickle: officially they are not at war, and so peacetime laws apply. Which means that they can't force anyone to fight. Any contract serviceman can quit at any time and for any reason. At most, they can be prosecuted for insubordination, which is not a very serious charge. — SophistiCat
Nonsense. Where do you get these ideas??? — baker
By comparing it to a bad meal, not to no meal. — baker
Well, sort of. Assume if you had eaten for your entire life exceptionally great meals, basically always something of the level that one gets in Michelin star restaurants, with added detail to the healthiness of your diet. You wouldn't know how bad food actually people eThat's appreciation for people who have no value system. — baker
